recalcitrate | (verb) show strong objection or repugnance; manifest vigorous opposition or resistance; be obstinately disobedient | - |
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recalculate | (verb) calculate anew | - |
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recall | (verb) recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection | Synonyms: call back, call up, recollect, remember, retrieve, think |
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(verb) cause one's (or someone else's) thoughts or attention to return from a reverie or digression | - |
(verb) go back to something earlier | Synonyms: come back, hark back, return |
(verb) summon to return | Synonyms: call back |
(verb) cause to be returned | Synonyms: call back, call in, withdraw |
(verb) make unavailable; bar from sale or distribution | - |
(verb) bring to mind | Synonyms: echo |
recant | (verb) formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure | Synonyms: abjure, forswear, resile, retract |
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recap | (verb) summarize briefly | Synonyms: recapitulate |
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recapitulate | (verb) summarize briefly | Synonyms: recap |
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(verb) repeat an earlier theme of a composition | Synonyms: repeat, reprise, reprize |
(verb) repeat stages of evolutionary development during the embryonic phase of life | - |
recapture | (verb) capture again | Synonyms: retake |
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(verb) take up anew | - |
(verb) experience anew | - |
(verb) take back by force, as after a battle | Synonyms: retake |
recast | (verb) cast again, in a different role | - |
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(verb) cast again | Synonyms: remold, remould |
(verb) cast or model anew | Synonyms: reforge, remodel |
recede | (verb) become faint or more distant | - |
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(verb) retreat | Synonyms: drop off, fall back, fall behind |
(verb) pull back or move away or backward | Synonyms: draw back, move back, pull away, pull back, retire, retreat, withdraw |
receipt | (verb) mark or stamp as paid | - |
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(verb) report the receipt of | Synonyms: acknowledge |
receive | (verb) convert into sounds or pictures | - |
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(verb) receive a specified treatment (abstract) | Synonyms: find, get, incur, obtain |
(verb) accept as true or valid | - |
(verb) regard favorably or with disapproval | - |
(verb) bid welcome to; greet upon arrival | Synonyms: welcome |
(verb) partake of the Holy Eucharist sacrament | - |
(verb) express willingness to have in one's home or environs | Synonyms: invite, take in |
(verb) register (perceptual input) | Synonyms: pick up |
(verb) go through (mental or physical states or experiences) | Synonyms: experience, get, have |
(verb) receive as a retribution or punishment | Synonyms: get |
(verb) get something; come into possession of | Synonyms: have |
(verb) have or give a reception | - |
(verb) experience as a reaction | Synonyms: encounter, meet |
recess | (verb) close at the end of a session | Synonyms: adjourn, break up |
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(verb) make a recess in | - |
(verb) put into a recess | - |
recharge | (verb) charge anew | - |
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(verb) load anew | Synonyms: reload |
recidivate | (verb) go back to bad behavior | Synonyms: fall back, lapse, regress, relapse, retrogress |
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reciprocate | (verb) alternate the direction of motion of | - |
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(verb) act, feel, or give mutually or in return | - |
recite | (verb) repeat aloud from memory | - |
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(verb) narrate or give a detailed account of | Synonyms: narrate, recount, tell |
(verb) recite in elocution | Synonyms: declaim |
(verb) specify individually | Synonyms: enumerate, itemise, itemize |
(verb) render verbally | Synonyms: retell |
reckon | (verb) deem to be | Synonyms: consider, regard, see, view |
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(verb) make a mathematical calculation or computation | Synonyms: calculate, cipher, compute, cypher, figure, work out |
(verb) expect, believe, or suppose | Synonyms: guess, imagine, opine, suppose, think |
(verb) judge to be probable | Synonyms: calculate, count on, estimate, figure, forecast |
(verb) have faith or confidence in | Synonyms: bank, bet, calculate, count, depend, look, rely, swear |
(verb) take account of | Synonyms: count |
reclaim | (verb) make useful again; transform from a useless or uncultivated state | - |
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(verb) overcome the wildness of; make docile and tractable | Synonyms: domesticate, domesticise, domesticize, tame |
(verb) bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one | Synonyms: rectify, reform, regenerate |
(verb) claim back | Synonyms: repossess |
(verb) reuse (materials from waste products) | Synonyms: recover |
reclassify | (verb) classify anew, change the previous classification | - |
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recline | (verb) lean in a comfortable resting position | Synonyms: recumb, repose |
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(verb) cause to recline | - |
(verb) move the upper body backwards and down | Synonyms: lean back |
recode | (verb) put into a different code; rearrange mentally | - |
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recognise | (verb) perceive to be the same | Synonyms: recognize |
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(verb) be fully aware or cognizant of | Synonyms: agnise, agnize, realise, realize, recognize |
(verb) accept (someone) to be what is claimed or accept his power and authority | Synonyms: acknowledge, know, recognize |
(verb) express obligation, thanks, or gratitude for | Synonyms: acknowledge, recognize |
(verb) express greetings upon meeting someone | Synonyms: greet, recognize |
(verb) detect with the senses | Synonyms: discern, distinguish, make out, pick out, recognize, spot, tell apart |
(verb) grant credentials to | Synonyms: accredit, recognize |
(verb) show approval or appreciation of | Synonyms: recognize |
recognize | (verb) perceive to be the same | Synonyms: recognise |
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(verb) be fully aware or cognizant of | Synonyms: agnise, agnize, realise, realize, recognise |
(verb) accept (someone) to be what is claimed or accept his power and authority | Synonyms: acknowledge, know, recognise |
(verb) express obligation, thanks, or gratitude for | Synonyms: acknowledge, recognise |
(verb) express greetings upon meeting someone | Synonyms: greet, recognise |
(verb) detect with the senses | Synonyms: discern, distinguish, make out, pick out, recognise, spot, tell apart |
(verb) grant credentials to | Synonyms: accredit, recognise |
(verb) show approval or appreciation of | Synonyms: recognise |
(verb) exhibit recognition for (an antigen or a substrate) | - |
recoil | (verb) spring back, as from a forceful thrust | Synonyms: kick, kick back |
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(verb) draw back, as with fear or pain | Synonyms: cringe, flinch, funk, quail, shrink, squinch, wince |
(verb) spring back; spring away from an impact | Synonyms: bounce, bound, rebound, resile, reverberate, ricochet, spring, take a hop |
(verb) come back to the originator of an action with an undesired effect | Synonyms: backfire, backlash |
recollect | (verb) recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection | Synonyms: call back, call up, recall, remember, retrieve, think |
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recombine | (verb) undergo genetic recombination | - |
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(verb) cause genetic recombination | - |
(verb) to combine or put together again | - |
recommence | (verb) begin again | - |
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(verb) cause to start anew | - |
recommend | (verb) make attractive or acceptable | - |
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(verb) express a good opinion of | Synonyms: commend |
(verb) push for something | Synonyms: advocate, urge |
recommit | (verb) send back to a committee | - |
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(verb) commit again | - |
(verb) commit once again, as of a crime | - |
recompense | (verb) make payment to; compensate | Synonyms: compensate, remunerate |
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(verb) make amends for; pay compensation for | Synonyms: compensate, indemnify, repair |
reconcile | (verb) bring into consonance or accord | Synonyms: harmonise, harmonize |
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(verb) make (one thing) compatible with (another) | Synonyms: accommodate, conciliate |
(verb) accept as inevitable | Synonyms: resign, submit |
(verb) come to terms | Synonyms: conciliate, make up, patch up, settle |
recondition | (verb) bring into an improved condition | - |
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reconfirm | (verb) confirm again | - |
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reconnoiter | (verb) explore, often with the goal of finding something or somebody | Synonyms: reconnoitre, scout |
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reconnoitre | (verb) explore, often with the goal of finding something or somebody | Synonyms: reconnoiter, scout |
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reconquer | (verb) conquer anew | - |
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reconsecrate | (verb) consecrate anew, as after a desecration | - |
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reconsider | (verb) consider again; give new consideration to; usually with a view to changing | - |
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(verb) consider again (a bill) that had been voted upon before, with a view to altering it | - |
reconstitute | (verb) construct or form anew or provide with a new structure | Synonyms: restructure |
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reconstruct | (verb) do over, as of (part of) a house | Synonyms: redo, remodel |
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(verb) cause somebody to adapt or reform socially or politically | - |
(verb) reassemble mentally | Synonyms: construct, retrace |
(verb) build again | Synonyms: rebuild |
(verb) return to its original or usable and functioning condition | Synonyms: restore |
reconvene | (verb) meet again | - |
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reconvert | (verb) convert back | - |
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reconvict | (verb) convict anew | - |
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recopy | (verb) copy again | - |
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record | (verb) make a record of; set down in permanent form | Synonyms: enter, put down |
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(verb) register electronically | Synonyms: tape |
(verb) indicate a certain reading; of gauges and instruments | Synonyms: read, register, show |
(verb) be aware of | Synonyms: register |
recount | (verb) narrate or give a detailed account of | Synonyms: narrate, recite, tell |
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(verb) count again | - |
recoup | (verb) regain or make up for | Synonyms: recover, recuperate |
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(verb) retain and refrain from disbursing; of payments | Synonyms: deduct, withhold |
(verb) reimburse or compensate (someone), as for a loss | Synonyms: reimburse |
recover | (verb) get over an illness or shock | Synonyms: convalesce, recuperate |
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(verb) regain a former condition after a financial loss | Synonyms: go back, recuperate |
(verb) get or find back; recover the use of | Synonyms: find, regain, retrieve |
(verb) regain or make up for | Synonyms: recoup, recuperate |
(verb) reuse (materials from waste products) | Synonyms: reclaim |
(verb) cover anew | - |
recreate | (verb) give new life or energy to | Synonyms: animate, quicken, reanimate, renovate, repair, revive, revivify, vivify |
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(verb) form anew in the imagination; recollect and re-form in the mind | Synonyms: re-create |
(verb) produce or make another of | Synonyms: re-create |
(verb) make a replica of | Synonyms: copy, re-create |
(verb) give encouragement to | Synonyms: cheer, embolden, hearten |
(verb) engage in recreational activities rather than work; occupy oneself in a diversion | Synonyms: play |
recriminate | (verb) return an accusation against someone or engage in mutual accusations; charge in return | - |
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recrudesce | (verb) become raw or open | Synonyms: break out, erupt |
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(verb) happen | Synonyms: break, develop |
recruit | (verb) cause to assemble or enlist in military | Synonyms: levy, raise |
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(verb) seek to employ | - |
(verb) register formally as a participant or member | Synonyms: enrol, enroll, enter, inscribe, raise |
rectify | (verb) set straight or right | Synonyms: amend, remediate, remedy, repair |
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(verb) make right or correct | Synonyms: correct, right |
(verb) reduce to a fine, unmixed, or pure state; separate from extraneous matter or cleanse from impurities | Synonyms: refine |
(verb) convert into direct current | - |
(verb) bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one | Synonyms: reclaim, reform, regenerate |
(verb) determine the length of | - |
recumb | (verb) lean in a comfortable resting position | Synonyms: recline, repose |
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recuperate | (verb) get over an illness or shock | Synonyms: convalesce, recover |
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(verb) restore to good health or strength | - |
(verb) regain a former condition after a financial loss | Synonyms: go back, recover |
(verb) regain or make up for | Synonyms: recoup, recover |
recur | (verb) happen or occur again | Synonyms: repeat |
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(verb) return in thought or speech to something | Synonyms: go back |
(verb) have recourse to | Synonyms: fall back, resort |
recurve | (verb) curve or bend (something) back or down | - |
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recuse | (verb) challenge or except to a judge as being incompetent or interested, in canon and civil law | - |
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(verb) disqualify oneself (as a judge) in a particular case | - |
recycle | (verb) use again after processing | Synonyms: reprocess, reuse |
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(verb) cause to repeat a cycle | - |